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Chicago examiner 1 weather forecast m t_a Chicago and vicinity â€” fair tf j 3 monday tuesday partly cloudy k -^ Â„ vi witn rising temp^-ature varia le y.-j â– l wmds > shifting to southerly and in jm l/jrw creasing tuesday m|l [ vol viii no 35 a m monday january 31 1910 fl success depends if iljhi tar-rely upon four ability to â– Â»â–¼Â» aad uy id fl3 not waste anything a barter and ex r *. i n>z changn ad will exchange anything yon 4 } i v \ cannot nse for omething yon want / / i m read the plant m c i price one cent __&Â£__* ***â€¢ <?Â»Â»â– â€¢*". - hanhart ignorant on postal savings idea says carter senator declares statement proves bankers uninformed plans speech to-day cites success in europe ciaifns 1 000,000,000 is hidden in u s because of lack of confidence washington jan 30 senator thomas u h carter author of the postal savings fcenk bill now before the senate read the statement of william hanhart president of the bankers life insurance company of new york and promptly and emphat ically replied to the arguments of the financier mr carter will deliver a set epeeeh on the pending measure ln the senate to-morrow and may not find it convenient to go outside of the prepared address but it was plain from his utter ances that he intended making the state ments of mr hanhart representative of the interests opposing the postal savings ystem the subject of a vigorous senate speech the statement of mr hanhart illus trates in its first paragraph the ignorance of the bankers opposed to the postal sav ings depositary said mr carter after announcing - he is an expert in banking matters and legislation mr hanhart says the idea of postal savings banks originated with secretary meyer the agitation for postal savings banks commenced ln england ln 1807 and the proposed system was then denounced by 111-informed men who predicted it would destroy the banking power of the country concentrate all money in the hands of the government impoverish the circulation and bring untold disasters to commerce predictions are disproved opposition based on such grounds _ these prevailed until 1861 when under the leadership of mr gladstone parlia ment established the postal savings bank all the dire results predicted by greed and ignorance failed to materialize and the system proved a benediction by the tenets of the pending bill the government pays only 2 per cent on sav ings whereas the average interest paid by the savings banks in this country exceeds 8 per cent while there are some 22,000 banks ln the united states one for every ' 4,000 people such banks are located where density and extent of population guaran tee profit there exists a large body of people who do not patronize any kind of a bank because they bave no confidence in banks it is estimated one billion of our three billions of coin and currency is being mdden away evidently mr hanhart has not read the mil for he alleges lt will result in large deposits ln the postoffices and it ls as sumed by him these deposits will be with held from circulation the truth is under this bill the money ln postal depositories will be deposited in any solvent bank or banks in the state or territory and as near as practicable in the neighborhood where deposited the banks to pay the government a sum not less than 2 per cent in in terest these banks are required to fur nish indemnity bonds to secure the prompt repayment of these funds on demand or can substitute collateral ' funds can be invested these postal savings funds will be in vested in securities only in case the banks refuse to accept them on the conditions specified this contingency can scarcely arise in view of the probabilities that these accounts will steadily increase and that in times of financial disturbance the funds of the postal savings service and the banks will increase because of the con fidence of small depositors in the govern ment inflammatory declarations andi wild pre dictions cannot disturb the minds of people who know the postal savings system has beea successful and satisfactory ln eng land since 18g1 and equally satisfactory and successful in all the countries of europe except germany which has a substitute in the form of municipal savings banks and spain and portugal where the proposition now is under consideration has 50,000,000-mile tail comet a 191 0 photographed : vis ible two weeks longer pasadena cal jan 30 comet a 1810 has a taii 00,000,000 miles long that is the decision of astronomers on â– mount wilson who declare the tail of the comet peculiarly constituted the first photo graphs of the comet have been attained and are highly satisfactory fifty millions cf miles would reach from the evening star venus to the earth and two-thirds of the way back at the present date the va grant of the skies will remain iu the heav ens two weeks longer dr cook fails to write children have xo word from him is report new york jan 30 the interest re vived in dr frederick a cook by the statement that he had been discovered in a german sanitarium was responsible o-day for a report that the discredited explorer snd his wife had failed to < uu muniente for many weeks with thei little girls at the hamilton tiistltuteÂ»*in west eightv-jrst street professor shaw superintendent of tho institution and in str-uctor uir.de a vigorous effort to avoid publicity and would neither deny nor af firm the states ent millionaire and wipe said to be reconciled phipps and wife make up is pittsburg report brother henry is said to be cause of millionaire and helpmate having become reconciled pittsburg pa jan 30 there is a deep seated rumor in . pittsburg to-night that lawrence phipps the former pitts burg millionaire has made up with his beautiful wife genevieve chandler phipps from whom he has been estranged for the past five years mrs phipps reached pittsburg to-day with her two children and went into seclu sion at the hotel schenley this following on a letter received by a pittsburg business man a few days since appears to clinch the tale of reconciliation mr phipps wrote to the pittsburg man who has been transacting some business for him urging haste saying with my family i intend to sail from new york for europe in a few flays and will be gone until july an effort to find mr phipps ln pitts burg to-night failed he is said to have been here within the past twenty-four hours should the reconciliation be effected as rumored it will reportedly be due to the intervention of henry phipps who is known to have worked for more than a year past to bring the two together fight near at greytown estrada sends troops to meet gov ernment forces bluefields nicaragua jan 30.â€”gen eral estrada has learned that 800 govern ment troops â€¢ are entrenching north of greytown so he and general matuty are arranging to start for that district with 500 men to-morrow morning on the steam ers senator and blanca general estrada will direct the troops on the senator which was recently chartered by the pro visional government there are rapid firers aboard the blanca estrada has been waiting for an opportunity to engage the madriz forces at i greytown but until now they have remained within the city prac tically under the protection of great brit ain the united states cruiser tacoma and the british cruiser scylla are now af greytown ... train wreck in depot commuters shaken i'p and t badly hnrt at randolph street station an Illinois central blue island suburban train crashed into a line of empty coaches at the randolph street station last night throwing the passengers of the train into heaps and demolishing the tender of the engine and one . of the empty cars the train which was due at the randolph street station at 11 o'clock was in charge of engineer foster and conductor b b lnnahan the only one who was badly injured was conductor lanahaa whose shoulder was wrenched nud who suffered internal injurie gompers in dime war labor leader asks for fnnd to fight the steel trnst new york jan 30 the 5,000,000 members of labor and farmers unions throughout the united states were formal ly asked to-day by samuel gompers pres ident of the american federation of labor to contribute 10 cents each to a fund to fight the steel trust the appeal comes in the form of a formal circular copies of which were made public in this city by several unions mr gompers puts the blame for starting the impending struggle upon the steel trust , he says the unions are acting in self defense and in protec tion of the american standards of life and of american institutions lord rosebery is urged for premier compromise cabinet sug gested as result of recent british elections to reform upper house peers willing to make conces sions budget expected to be passed london jan 30 premier asquith having gone to the continent to rest and reflect on the election results and chan cellor lloyd-george closely following him the politicians are discussing what lines of battle will be taken up in the new | parliament the moral generally drawn from the elections is that the country does not want radical changes in the house of lords or in the government policies the spirit of conciliation therefore is abroad and schemes for a compromise are being debated the conservative papers propose that a joint cabinet be chosen from the most moderate men of both parties to carry on the government for about two years and that a truce be declared on party ques tions in the meantime a royal commis sion to investigate the country's fiscal policy and to make recommendations re garding tariff reform is proposed liberals object to dictation the newspaper scheme of coalition gov ernment is not taken seriously by the liberals who having won a victory even if it is a narrow one object to having their opponents dictate the programme lord rosebery's name is put forward for the premiership in the compromise cabinet bnt rosebery has for a long time refused office and his popularity now is at a low mark because of his course on the budget issues the reform of the house of lords seems to tie the one thing assured both parties support it now the conservatives and the lords themselves are willing to alopt mod erate changes immediately lest reforms which would knock the foundations from the tipper house be carried the result is likely to be the abolition of the hereditary principle so that no longer shall the sec ond and succeeding generations be given a vote unless they prove their fitness to leg islate by service in the house of com mons ln civil office or in the army or navy /â€¢ f conservatives are willing to have the lords deprived of the power to hold tr taxation bills if some arrangement is made to prohibit new legislation until it is em braced ln those bills liberals would bar veto power the liberals want to deprive the house of lords of power to veto any bill their favorite plan ls to compel the lords to adopt any bill sent them for the third time by the house of commons this would make the house of commons consider a rejected bill carefully and would give that body power to pass any legislation on which it hair determined ln one session beyond th reforming of the house of lords and the passing of the budget par liament is not likely to get far with any thing the irish members probably will obtain the introduction of a home , rule measure but the conservatives will opposo that solidly and a number of liberals are pledged against home rule several cabinet changes are likely when the new government ls formed xlckenna who has been unpopular as first lord of the admiralty will likely be dropped he may be given a peerage war secretary . haldane may become head of the navy burns president of the local government board probably will succeed gladstone as home secretary churchill will take the place vacated by burns and each will re ceive 25,000 instead of 12,500 as salary gets 1,000,000 policy john h jones of pittsburg equals vanderbllt record new york jan 30 john h jones of pittsburg head of the pittsburg-buffalo company has been insured in the equita ble for a,000,000 payable to the pittsburg buffalo company george w vanderbllt is the ouly other person now known to carry so much in one policy though there re several men who carry in the aggre gate a larger amount of insurance the late frank h peavey of minneapolis car ried a million dollar policy the l'ittsburg buffalo company has insured the lives of all its officers and is now paying to the equitable life more thau 50,0u0 a year in premiums Taft and guest hike president and mrs anderson tramp distance before dinner washington jan 30 president Taft to-day gave mrs charleuÃŸ anderson of cincinnati his guest a taste of his idea of a nice little tramp before dinner accom panied by mrs anderson geueral clarence edwards and captain butt the president drove out in his automobile to chevy chase stopped at the residence of senator xewlands and started back on foot mrs anderson kept the pace enjoying the long walk back to the city as much us anybody no chinese parliament throne deniea petition bnt will arced in nine tears pekin jan 30 an imperial edict is sued to-day denies the petition recently submitted by the representatives of the provincial assemblies who are now in pekin asking for the early establishment of a parliament the throne adheres to the original plan of an imperial assembly now and the establishment of a parliament at the end of nine years according to the constitutional scheme pi restores kidnapings restores disappearance and return of kile child called plan to re claim backslider wife's prayer answered police cease search for those supposed to have stolen 5-year-old girl praise god we've got our child back again and my husband is back again with the lord said mrs henry h kile and the mother was the picture of happiness for little clara beatrice her flve-year-old daughter supposedly kidnaped last friday was in her arms and her husband an ad mitted backslider had returned to the fold ' the history of evangelism records few events more remarkable than the theory which the police reached yesterday to ex plain the kidnaping believing their theory correct they have dropped all search for the kidnapers and released their only suspect they are convinced they say that the dlsapearance of the child was delib erately planned by persons whose only pur pose was to draw the father back to chris tianity mr kile according to his own admis sion has been a backslider for years his religion simply had grown cold he con tinued to live according to the ethics of the moral code but he had ceased to pray mrs kile's faith ardent to mrs kile her husband's loss of inter est in spiritual affairs was a source of deep sorrow the more so because of her own ardent faith she remained one of the most active members of the independent holiness workers at the welcome gospel mission Chicago avenue and orleans street she exhorted with her husband in vain she prayed that he might return to the flock other members of the holiness band prayed with her among them was a man named brinkman whose name be came known to the police after the sup posed kidnaping still mr kile's indiffer ence did not yield suddenly last friday little clara disap peared the father and apparently the mother too were distracted with grief for the first time in years he knelt with his wife and prayed he vowed if the child was restored to hiin he would reunite with the mission * mr brinkman called at the home and prayed with them for the child's return pray for child's return if you but pray in faith believing he said to the father clara will be returned to you _. saturday came and still there was no word from the missinng girl god ls taking care of her said mrs kile in an interview she will come back safe and i have told my husband to pray for her return when clara comas back he will return to the fold within a few hours after the mother spoke these words george larrissey a lit tle newsboy found the missing clara i knew god would bring her back said the mother after young larrissey had brought the child home mr kile has been a backslider but now he has accepted god again and sure enough at the mission services yesterday there sat mr kile and no partic ipant was more devout and more thankful than be mother denies plot theory at the kile home 440 Chicago avenue a reporter for the Chicago examiner in formed mr and mrs kile of the theory of the police oh how could they think such a thing cried mrs kile would i have been so anxious to bring my husband to the lord if i was such a hypocrite as that and could be guilty of such cruelty and deceit xo no i feel very sorry to think that the police do not bemeve there is such a thing as a real christian why that police idea is ridiculous said mr kile i would never believe it when this child disappeared i lm iriedlately said i'm responsible this is a punishment for my hardness of heart i was not a sinner in the sense of the world but had been neglecting ggod for two years and a half in that time i had twice taken the name of god in vain when clara was stolen i turned to him as my only protector my wife and i prayed and then i ceased to worry inspector revere released frank wine berg the only suspect arrested ln the search for the kidnaper famous fire fan dead andy carpenter boasted missing bnt one big blase since 1871 fire chief horan and his marshals ami hundreds of his acquaintances on the de partment heard yesterday that andy carpenter the greatest fire fan in chi cago was dead at his home 158 institute place from pneumonia mr carpenter who was in the aerated water manufactur ing business boasted that he had missed but one big fire since 1871 and was one of the most prominent of chief borah's staff " this staff whose members wear a fire badge and have authority to help fight fires was a direct outcome of the great fire and contained some of chicago's most prominent names carpenter was lavish in his use of autos to reach fires and ten miles was a short trip paris trembles as flood recedes unsafe buildings must be razed the civic arms of paris here given show a curious coincidence with the conditions prevailing in that stricken city under a field of the lilies of france an ancient galley is shown tchile the motto displayed may oe freely translated it will float although submerged trial over hesler girl photo on to-day evanston â€¢ young woman is ready to testify for accused naval officers boston mass jan 30 the famous navy court-martial which is the out growth of a row over the photograph of dorothy hesler of evanston will begin here to-morrow miss hesler who is now in evanston is said to be ready to testify for paymaster george p auld who is accused oi striking dr edward s cowles of the back bay at a navy yard dance and dr . ainsley h . robnett said to be engaged to miss hesler and accused of ' writing ungentlemanly letters to dr cowles a bombshell for the prosecution has been prepared by the attorneys for auld and robnett it is said thut naval law pro hibits the^trial of auld and robnett again because they have already been tried and convicted both auld and robnett received from secretary meyer letters of reprimand for their attack on dr cowles and these letters according to the defense will make further trial of these men ille gal major harry leonard one of the best known jurists in the navy and the judge advocate of the now famous sutton court of inquiry has been engaged as chief coun sel for the defense captain a j harsh inger will be junior counsel for auld and robnett captain harshinger says miss hesler will be called if necessary the whole thing i,s a tempest in a teapot he said to-day i received a letter from miss hesler saying that she is ready and will ing to testify at ue trial if we need her we shall summon her though i shall not say that we already have done so tom johnson ill in n y former mayor of cleveland keeps close to hotel â€¢Â» new york jan 30.-thatj tom l johnson former mayor of cleveland is staying at the hotel prince george and that he is not in good health wns con firmed at the prince george to-night it was said at the hotel that mr johnson with his wife and a trained nurse had been guests of the hotel for the last ten days none of mr johnson's party could be seen to-night but it was said that he was not confined to his bed lie went out for a wnlk saturday and it was declared he had been seen in the hotel corridors to-day dr miederer is defiant man to whom tenor jorn gave wife is willing to fight berlin jan 30 dr william miederer the yonng bavarian military dentist for love of whom fran jorn wife of tenor curl jorn has turned from her husband and whom she will marry when she ob tains a divorce vouchsafed nn interview to-day dr miederer treated rather as a matter of course the great sacrifice carl jorn has made he said that there could be no question of his marrying frau jorn until she had obtained a judicial separa tion he decried any hint of scandal and intimated that he was ready to defend frau jorn's honor and his own in any way should such action be necessary german-americans plan war on tariff cleveland mass meeting takes up scheme to enlist alliance of 2,500,000 men / â€”â€” â€” cleveland 0 jan 30 a national war on the present tariff laws by the ger man-american alliance enrolling a mem bership of 2,500,000 in the united states was launched here to-night a mass meeting of the 25,000 germans in cleveland wlll-.be called as soon as ar rangements can be made fot the use of central armory the largest auditorium in the city the delegates were called to gether late to-day by the executive commit tee of the alliance in cleveland resolutions were adopted appealing to the germans of the country to unite in a war on the tariff issue the high cost of living is placed on the tariff and not on any trust or organization directly within the united states the resolutions set forth that the dele gates at the meeting have with their separate organizations gone over the pres ent industrial situation in all its phases for months their investigations show the resolutions say that while the packers and other dealers in food products have a mo nopoly on their trade and are probably combining to govern trade the real cause of the high prices is the tariff strong roosevelt sentiment developed at the meeting it was said and it wns inti mated that unless president Taft took some step to support the stand taken by the germans there would be a repudiation of his entire administration live on 20 cents a day harvard expert says working peo ple tay extra for taste of food boston jan 30 franklin a white harvard's expert in dietetics advocating the use of cornmeal oleomargarine cheap sirup and especially herring and potatoes as substitutes for meat said to-day there is.no reason why any workingman or woman could not live on 20 cents a day the great trouble is that we neglect the cheap nutritious foods because we do not care for their flavor or because we imagine they are not as palatable as other and much more costly foods the very best outcome of the present no-meat movement will be the discovery by many persons that they can get along on little or no meat and feel in better health than ever before 2,000 a year or no bride pastor refuses to marry men whose annnnl income is less rittsbfrg pa jan 30 the rev wright gibson pastor of the mckees rocks presbyterian church to-day notified en gaged couples among his parishioners that he would not unite any couples unless the intended bridegroom could prove his income was at least oo a year the minister declares that with the present price of commodities this iucome is necessary to live poverty leads to divorces he said and i do uot purpose to assist the divorce cause iter still it danger point suffering is intense gay spirits of the people re turn with the lowering of the seine and the vvprk of rescue is being rushed looters in the rural districts are shot by soldiers troops help to relieve the dis tress of the homeless play at the national theater is given by candlelight as in days of moliere lan terns in champs elysees paris jan 30 midnight lt is forty si hours now since the great flood began to abate in these forty-six hours the height of the rushing torrent at font royal has decreased only thirty-five centi meters not quite fourteen inches â€” about three-tenths of an inch per hour should the decline become no more rapid it will take to the middle of febru ary almost for the river to return to its normal level such is the prospect to-night it is fill ing the authorities with gloom a fall of fourteen inches perpendicalur in a volume of water so enormous means far more than appears from the figures the vast outflow is largely draineil r-.nl as the lowering continues and the srea of that overflow diminishes the pace of the fall will be faster it is believed to-night that some of the buildings in the region of the sit lazare western railway station will have to be torn down some of them are the largest department stores ln paris the vast frin temps building ls among those whose safe ty is doubted new rise in yonne reported considerable alarm was felt to-night when dispatches from the districts outsid paris reported a new rise during the day in the yonne one of the tributaries of the seine this however was offset by the fall in the marne the other main tributary i which is much greater than the yonne j happily the barometer shows no sign ci^a further rail to-day the weather wa^h clear and bright tho sun shone all dayh long it helped to make the day a day o"flj holiday here and such a one as even paris has rarely perhaps never seen before the strange thing is that despite the fall of fourteen inches the flood in some parts of the city is increasing and in most of the flooded streets the water was deeper the devastation of property grows ap pallingly everywhere the caving in and the blowing out of the surfaces of the streets continue * -Â» in the villages outside the situation _> much more deplorable to-day than it has been at any time before many pitiful cases are being found the water is now up to the second stories of a great mauy houses it has left the unhappy prisoners only their roofs a stream of water twelve feet deep waa rushing through gennevilliers and colom bes making the work of rescue and succor more difficult even than yesterday h eral of the houses collapsed and man;,t i sons were taken off the roofs of 1 i homes h danger of cave-ins feared fl hundreds of persons are reported t without food or shelter a it all da army of troops nnd civilians vcrked in b flooded territory bringing succor tc ' the jl distressed and distributing provisions by jl boats to the thousands of victims eor fl rounded by water who refused to quit fl their homes fl because of the danger of cave-ins to im the pressure of the holllrg paters l.e-al neath hundreds of points were si m guarded although there is no intention on t part of the government to declare martlh law the completely submerged dutrlifl such as jnvel are in the hands of t military to prevent pillaging the solilierfl have orders not to spare criminals eangh.fl in the act of looting thus far there h.ivefl been no such cases within the city urflj the danger is great as the french usual'.^b keep money in their homes outside of paris however many flsflj plorable instances of looting have been re 1 ported a regular band of thieve sfl been at work in the vicinity of charenton.^fl but the soldier have been shooting tbemfl at sight the zouaves last night killed f->fl of the pillagers in ivry and t in arte fl the criminals ba-ie now transferred heirfl operations to the devastated rpelor j.low â– d to french novelist dead special cable to the examine paris jan 30 edonard rod the cele brated french novelist is dead

Chicago examiner 1 weather forecast m t_a Chicago and vicinity â€” fair tf j 3 monday tuesday partly cloudy k -^ Â„ vi witn rising temp^-ature varia le y.-j â– l wmds > shifting to southerly and in jm l/jrw creasing tuesday m|l [ vol viii no 35 a m monday january 31 1910 fl success depends if iljhi tar-rely upon four ability to â– Â»â–¼Â» aad uy id fl3 not waste anything a barter and ex r *. i n>z changn ad will exchange anything yon 4 } i v \ cannot nse for omething yon want / / i m read the plant m c i price one cent __&Â£__* ***â€¢ much more deplorable to-day than it has been at any time before many pitiful cases are being found the water is now up to the second stories of a great mauy houses it has left the unhappy prisoners only their roofs a stream of water twelve feet deep waa rushing through gennevilliers and colom bes making the work of rescue and succor more difficult even than yesterday h eral of the houses collapsed and man;,t i sons were taken off the roofs of 1 i homes h danger of cave-ins feared fl hundreds of persons are reported t without food or shelter a it all da army of troops nnd civilians vcrked in b flooded territory bringing succor tc ' the jl distressed and distributing provisions by jl boats to the thousands of victims eor fl rounded by water who refused to quit fl their homes fl because of the danger of cave-ins to im the pressure of the holllrg paters l.e-al neath hundreds of points were si m guarded although there is no intention on t part of the government to declare martlh law the completely submerged dutrlifl such as jnvel are in the hands of t military to prevent pillaging the solilierfl have orders not to spare criminals eangh.fl in the act of looting thus far there h.ivefl been no such cases within the city urflj the danger is great as the french usual'.^b keep money in their homes outside of paris however many flsflj plorable instances of looting have been re 1 ported a regular band of thieve sfl been at work in the vicinity of charenton.^fl but the soldier have been shooting tbemfl at sight the zouaves last night killed f->fl of the pillagers in ivry and t in arte fl the criminals ba-ie now transferred heirfl operations to the devastated rpelor j.low â– d to french novelist dead special cable to the examine paris jan 30 edonard rod the cele brated french novelist is dead